As it turns out, the petty suit was the best thing to happen to Yiannopoulos' critics, because the editor's notes for his first draft were among the public court docs that found their way to Twitter. And, holy-Steve Bannon are they rough!

Publisher and novelist Jason Pinter tweeted out screenshots of the court records on Wednesday, including scathing feedback from Yiannopoulos' conservative editor Mitchell Ivers on the book's weak arguments, arbitrary insults, and one too many "black-dick" jokes.

Overall, Ivers called the Dangerous manuscript "at best, a superficial work full of incendiary jokes with no coherent or sophisticated analysis of political issues." But the real hilarity lies in Ivers' page comments, which grew increasingly infuriated with Yiannopoulos's inability to string together a logical argument.

Do these notes hint at yet another reason why his book wasn't published? See the lowlights for yourself (below), provided by delighted Twitter users:

The Bad Feminist author has decided to pull her upcoming book How to Be Heard from being published by Simon & Schuster imprint TED Books over the controversy surrounding Milo Yiannopoulos!

As you've probably heard, the famous publishing company sparked outrage after it was revealed their imprint Threshold offered the Internet troll a $250K deal. Smh. Leslie Jones has even blasted S&S for their decision for making a deal with the man who relentlessly harassed her on social media over the summer.

Steve Jobs will be allowing a biography to be released via Simon & Schuster publishing about the Apple CEO's life, to be titled iSteve: The Book of Jobs, and written by Walter Isaacson, with a 2012 release!

Apparently, the author has previously written biographies, but only for already-deceased folks like Albert Einstein and Ben Franklin. However, he's been hard at work on the Jobs project since 2009, and has had complete access to his friends and family.

So we guess that means we'll know all about his health scares then! Inneresting!